emerson-method-236.txt

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        THE METHOD OF NATURE
 
        _An Oration delivered before the Society of the Adelphi, in
Waterville College, Maine, August 11, 1841_

        GENTLEMEN,
        Let us exchange congratulations on the enjoyments and the pros
literary anniversary.  The land we live in has no interest so dear,
if it knew its want, as the fit consecration of days of reason and
thought.  Where there is no vision, the people perish.  The scholars
are the priests of that thought which establishes the foundations of
the earth.  No matter what is their special work or profession, they
stand for the spiritual interest of the world, and it is a common
calamity if they neglect their post in a country where the material
interest is so predominant as it is in America.  We hear something
too much of the results of machinery, commerce, and the useful arts.
We are a puny and a fickle folk.  Avarice, hesitation, and following,
are our diseases.  The rapid wealth which hundreds in the community
acquire in trade, or by the incessant expansions of our population
and arts, enchants the eyes of all the rest; the luck of one is the
hope of thousands, and the bribe acts like the neighborhood of a gold
mine to impoverish the farm, the school, the church, the house, and
the very body and feature of man.

        I do not wish to look with sour aspect at the industrious
manufacturing village, or the mart of commerce.  I love the music of
the water-wheel; I value the railway; I feel the pride which the
sight of a ship inspires; I look on trade and every mechanical craft
as education also.  But let me discriminate what is precious herein.
There is in each of these works an act of invention, an intellectual
step, or short series of steps taken; that act or step is the
spiritual act; all the rest is mere repetition of the same a thousand
times.  And I will not be deceived into admiring the routine of
handicrafts and mechanics, how splendid soever the result, any more
than I admire the routine of the scholars or clerical class.  That
splendid results ensue from the labors of stupid men, is the fruit of
higher laws than their will, and the routine is not to be praised for
it.  I would not have the laborer sacrificed to the result, -- I
would not have the laborer sacrificed to my convenience and pride,
nor to that of a great class of such as me.  Let there be worse
cotton and better men.  The weaver should not be bereaved of his
superiority to his work, and his knowledge that the product or the
skill is of no value, except so far as it embodies his spiritual
prerogatives.  If I see nothing to admire in the unit, shall I admire
a million units?  Men stand in awe of the city, but do not honor any
individual citizen; and are continually yielding to this dazzling
result of numbers, that which they would never yield to the solitary
example of any one.

        Whilst the multitude of men degrade each other, and give
currency to desponding doctrines, the scholar must be a bringer of
hope, and must reinforce man against himself.  I sometimes believe
that our literary anniversaries will presently assume a greater
importance, as the eyes of men open to their capabilities.  Here, a
new set of distinctions, a new order of ideas, prevail.  Here, we set
a bound to the respectability of wealth, and a bound to the
pretensions of the law and the church.  The bigot must cease to be a
bigot to-day.  Into our charmed circle, power cannot enter; and the
sturdiest defender of existing institutions feels the terrific
inflammability of this air which condenses heat in every corner that
may restore to the elements the fabrics of ages.  Nothing solid is
secure; every thing tilts and rocks.  Even the scholar is not safe;
he too is searched and revised.  Is his learning dead?  Is he living
in his memory?  The power of mind is not mortification, but life.
But come forth, thou curious child! hither, thou loving, all-hoping
poet! hither, thou tender, doubting heart, who hast not yet found any
place in the world's market fit for thee; any wares which thou
couldst buy or sell, -- so large is thy love and ambition, -- thine
and not theirs is the hour.  Smooth thy brow, and hope and love on,
for the kind heaven justifies thee, and the whole world feels that
thou art in the right.

        We ought to celebrate this hour by expressions of manly joy.
Not thanks, not prayer seem quite the highest or truest name for our
communication with the infinite, -- but glad and conspiring
reception, -- reception that becomes giving in its turn, as the
receiver is only the All-Giver in part and in infancy.  I cannot, --
nor can any man, -- speak precisely of things so sublime, but it
seems to me, the wit of man, his strength, his grace, his tendency,
his art, is the grace and the presence of God.  It is beyond
explanation.  When all is said and done, the rapt saint is found the
only logician.  Not exhortation, not argument becomes our lips, but
paeans of joy and praise.  But not of adulation: we are too nearly
related in the deep of the mind to that we honor.  It is God in us
which checks the language of petition by a grander thought.  In the
bottom of the heart, it is said; `I am, and by me, O child! this fair
body and world of thine stands and grows.  I am; all things are mine:
and all mine are thine.'

        The festival of the intellect, and the return to its source,
cast a strong light on the always interesting topics of Man and
Nature.  We are forcibly reminded of the old want.  There is no man;
there hath never been.  The Intellect still asks that a man may be
born.  The flame of life flickers feebly in human breasts.  We demand
of men a richness and universality we do not find.  Great men do not
content us.  It is their solitude, not their force, that makes them
conspicuous.  There is somewhat indigent and tedious about them.
They are poorly tied to one thought.  If they are prophets, they are
egotists; if polite and various, they are shallow.  How tardily men
arrive at any result! how tardily they pass from it to another!  The
crystal sphere of thought is as concentrical as the geological
structure of the globe.  As our soils and rocks lie in strata,
concentric strata, so do all men's thinkings run laterally, never
vertically.  Here comes by a great inquisitor with auger and
plumb-line, and will bore an Artesian well through our conventions
and theories, and pierce to the core of things.  But as soon as he
probes the crust, behold gimlet, plumb-line, and philosopher take a
lateral direction, in spite of all resistance, as if some strong wind
took everything off its feet, and if you come month after month to
see what progress our reformer has made, -- not an inch has he
pierced, -- you still find him with new words in the old place,
floating about in new parts of the same old vein or crust.  The new
book says, `I will give you the key to nature,' and we expect to go
like a thunderbolt to the centre.  But the thunder is a surface
phenomenon, makes a skin-deep cut, and so does the sage.  The wedge
turns out to be a rocket.  Thus a man lasts but a very little while,
for his monomania becomes insupportably tedious in a few months.  It
is so with every book and person: and yet -- and yet -- we do not
take up a new book, or meet a new man, without a pulse-beat of
expectation.  And this invincible hope of a more adequate interpreter
is the sure prediction of his advent.

        In the absence of man, we turn to nature, which stands next.
In the divine order, intellect is primary; nature, secondary; it is
the memory of the mind.  That which once existed in intellect as pure
law, has now taken body as Nature.  It existed already in the mind in
solution; now, it has been precipitated, and the bright sediment is
the world.  We can never be quite strangers or inferiors in nature.
It is flesh of our flesh, and bone of our bone.  But we no longer
hold it by the hand; we have lost our miraculous power; our arm is no
more as strong as the frost; nor our will equivalent to gravity and
the elective attractions.  Yet we can use nature as a convenient
standard, and the meter of our rise and fall.  It has this advantage
as a witness, it cannot be debauched.  When man curses, nature still
testifies to truth and love.  We may, therefore, safely study the
mind in nature, because we cannot steadily gaze on it in mind; as we
explore the face of the sun in a pool, when our eyes cannot brook his
direct splendors.

        It seems to me, therefore, that it were some suitable paean, if
we should piously celebrate this hour by exploring the _method of
nature_.  Let us see _that_, as nearly as we can, and try how far it
is transferable to the literary life.  Every earnest glance we give
to the realities around us, with intent to learn, proceeds from a
holy impulse, and is really songs of praise.  What difference can it
make whether it take the shape of exhortation, or of passionate
exclamation, or of scientific statement?  These are forms merely.
Through them we express, at last, the fact, that God has done thus or
thus.

        In treating a subject so large, in which we must necessarily
appeal to the intuition, and aim much more to suggest, than to
describe, I know it is not easy to speak with the precision
attainable on topics of less scope.  I do not wish in attempting to
paint a man, to describe an air-fed, unimpassioned, impossible ghost.
My eyes and ears are revolted by any neglect of the physical facts,
the limitations of man.  And yet one who conceives the true order of
nature, and beholds the visible as proceeding from the invisible,
cannot state his thought, without seeming to those who study the
physical laws, to do them some injustice.  There is an intrinsic
defect in the organ.  Language overstates.  Statements of the
infinite are usually felt to be ...
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